Austin American-Statesman

Don’t call me Caitlyn: Baby name plunges in popularity

- By Stephen Ohlemacher

Don’t call me Caitlyn.

A year after Caitlyn Jenner announced her new name and gender, the popularity of the name Caitlyn plummeted more than any other baby name, according to Social Security’s annual list of the most popular baby names.

In fact, the four names that dropped the most were all variations of the same name: Caitlin, Caitlyn, Katelynn and Kaitlynn.

“It was inevitable,” said Laura Wattenberg, founder of BabynameWi­zard.com. “Caitlyn was already falling in popularity. Now it is suddenly controvers­ial.”

The Social Security Administra­tion released its annual list of the 1,000 most popular baby names for 2016 on Friday. The agency uses the announceme­nt to drive traffic to its website, where workers can start tracking their benefits long before they retire.

Emma was the top baby name for girls for the third year in a row. It was followed by Olivia, Ava, Sophia and Isabella.

Noah was the top baby name for boys for the fourth year in a row. It was followed by Liam, William, Mason and James.

The agency also lists the baby names that increase — and decrease — the most in popularity.

All four versions of Caitlyn fell out of the top 1,000.

In 2015, the former Bruce Jenner, an Olympic gold medalist, shocked the world when she announced that she was a transgende­r woman. The iconic cover of Vanity Fair magazine was emblazoned with the quote, “Call me Caitlyn,” on top of a picture of a very feminine Jenner.

The first time any spelling of the name showed up on Social Security’s list of popular baby names was in 1976 when Caitlin debuted at No. 947.

C-a-i-t-l-i-n has been the most common spelling. The name peaked in popularity in 1988, when it ranked No. 44.

Last year, it fell 542 spots — the biggest drop of any name — to No. 1,151.

Wattenberg said it would be wrong to blame Caitlyn’s drop in popularity solely to the fact that Jenner is transgende­r. In general, she said, parents don’t want to give their children names that might attract controvers­y.

It’s one reason few parents name their children after politician­s.

“Even parents who are huge Donald Trump supporters are unlikely to name their child Donald,” Wattenberg said.

For the record, Donald fell 45 spots last year, to No. 488.

The Social Security Administra­tion’s website provides lists of the top 1,000 baby names for each year, dating to 1880. The top baby names that year were John and Mary. John is now No. 28 and Mary has fallen to No. 127.

Sometimes old is new: Emma was the third most popular name in 1880.

The top 10 baby names for girls stayed the same in 2016, though the order shuffled a bit.

For boys, Alexander dropped to No. 11 and Elijah cracked the top 10 for the first time, at No. 9.

Baby naming experts said parents have long used biblical names for their children. However, there has been a decided shift from the New Testament to the Old.

“Elijah to our grandparen­ts would be unimaginab­le,” Wattenberg said.

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